Abstract

Background: There is now significant empirical literature suggesting that finance is good for growth only up to a threshold level of financial development, becoming harmful after that level, in developed and developing countries. Aim: This study extends this literature that investigates non-linearities on the finance-growth link, by testing the inverted U -shape hypothesis in sub-Saharan African countries, which are among the least developed ones. Setting: 36 countries from sub-Saharan Africa over the period 1980–2015. Method: Estimation of quadratic dynamic panel data models by system-generalised method of moments. Results: Empirical results show that there is a hump-shaped relationship between financial development and economic growth in sub-Saharan African countries. Conclusion: Results suggest that the hypothesis of ‘too much finance harms economic growth’ also holds for low-income and less developed countries, but for much lower threshold levels of financial development than those of more developed and higher-income countries. As for policy implications, measures to strengthen finance quality and other growth-enhancing strategies need to be undertaken, rather than increasing finance size.

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